Yes, if you store all your files in a user writeable folder (desktop, my documents folder, %appdata% folder, etc.) and you don't write to system-level registry or Start/Stop services, etc., then wyUpdate will be allowed to updates without requesting UAC permission.

For example, if you app is a few files and the app is installed to %appdata%\YourApp, then the user will update without needing admin permission.

Thank you for your reply. Application is really few files. We store them in C:\CSI\AppName folder and all users have Full Control rights to the C:\CSI folder. Application does not write anything into the registry, only to folder mentioned, But the UAC window still appears. (button to "Finish" actualization has the small UAC icon, when user press it, Administrator login information are requested)

If you want wyUpdate to not request UAC permissions then you need to install to a predefined location that the user is guaranteed to have access to. For example: the desktop, documents folder, %appdata%, etc.

The "C:\CSI " folder is not one of those predefined folders, and thus UAC access is required.

Yes , but all these folders are User-Specific. We need to solve following scenario. A teacher (admin) installs the application (it is really only several files, no services, no registry changes). Then students (users) will use the application. When we release a new version and any student will start it, we need the application to download this new build and install it without any cooperation with a teacher.

In case we will use AppData or Desktop folder, then every user must install its own copy of application. How to solve this scenario, please?

We decided to change the behavior of the wyUpdate to bypass the UAC by changing the source code. It satisfied our requirements. But I have another important question - what will happen when you release new version of wyUpdate? Will this your new version overwrite our version?

[quote="Sam"]If you want wyUpdate to not request UAC permissions then you need to install to a predefined location that the user is guaranteed to have access to. For example: the desktop, documents folder, %appdata%, etc.

The "C:\CSI " folder is not one of those predefined folders, and thus UAC access is required.[/quote]

Is there a list available somewhere of all the directories that the user is guaranteed to have access to?

Is this testable beforehand, via C#, so that one can notify the user at program startup that they will not be able to update without uac. And recommend that they move the program if the user feels he want this functionality?